by Jenny Coates | 19 Jul 2019 | Ada Cambridge, Wangaratta
As we saw in Part 6 and 7 of this study, life in Wangaratta agreed very well with Ada Cambridge. However in her memoir she hinted at a disappointment that wounded deeply, but which she could not elaborate on. … we still found nothing to disagree with us –...
by Jenny Coates | 28 Jun 2019 | Ada Cambridge, North East Victoria, Wangaratta
After Ada Cambridge wrote about the people who became her closest friends during her short residence in Wangaratta, she took to observing the community and comparing it to life in England. And as for the cottage people – the marked thing about them was that they...
by Jenny Coates | 14 Jun 2019 | Ada Cambridge, North East Victoria, Wangaratta
As we saw in Part 5 of this series, Ada Cambridge remarked on the egalitarian nature of early 1870s Wangaratta society, and mentioned a few friends who were from the “tradesfolk” class. After recalling the wife of a stationer – identified as Anne...
by Jenny Coates | 31 May 2019 | Ada Cambridge, Wangaratta
Ada Cambridge, as we have seen in previous posts in this series, enjoyed an active social life. There were bazaars and church teas and such things – quite as exciting as the private functions – at which our circle of friends and acquaintances was...
by Jenny Coates | 17 May 2019 | Ada Cambridge, Family Tree, North East Victoria, Surnames I am Researching, Wangaratta
After doctors, bankers came next in social importance in Wangaratta according to Ada Cambridge’s memoir Thirty Years in Australia. She described them as “the backbone of country society”, remarking how important it was that “they should be...
by Jenny Coates | 3 May 2019 | Ada Cambridge, North East Victoria, Wangaratta
After discussing the Police Magistrate who she considered the upper echelon of Wangaratta society in her memoir Thirty Years in Australia, Ada Cambridge tackled the doctors. Next to the P.M. in the social scale came the doctors. There were two, English gentleman both....